Traditionally, web forms are configured to submit synchronously. When users submit a form, they are redirected to an acknowledgement page, or in case of submission failure, an error page. However, modern web experiences like single page applications are gaining popularity where the web page remains static while client-server interaction happens in the background. You can now provide this experience with adaptive forms by configuring asynchronous submission. In this case, an adaptive form behaves like a single page application as the form does not reload or its URL does not change when the submitted form data is validated on the server.

Read on for details about asynchronous submission in adaptive forms.

Configure asynchronous submission

To configure asynchronous submission for an adaptive form:

In adaptive form authoring mode, select the Form Container object and tap to open its properties.

In the Submission properties section, enable Use asynchronous submission.

In the On Submit section, select one of the following options to perform on successful form submission.

Redirect to URL: Redirects to the specified URL or page on form submission. You can specify a URL or browse to choose the path to a page in the Redirect URL/Path field.

Show Message: Displays a message on form submission. You can write a message in the text field below the Show Message option. The text field support rich text formatting.

Tap to save the properties.

How asynchronous submission works

AEM Forms provides out-of-the-box success and error handlers for form submissions. Handlers are client-side functions that execute based on the server response. When a form is submitted, the data is transmitted to the server for validation, which returns a response to the client with information about the success or error event for the submission. The information is passed as parameters to the relevant handler to execute the function.

List of error objects, which includes the SOM expression of the field that failed validation and the corresponding error message

The errors handler reads the server response and accordingly displays the error message on the form.

Override default handlers using rules

Form developers and authors can write rules, at form level, in code editor to override default handlers. The server response for success and error events is exposed at form level, which developers can access using $event.data in rules.

Perform the following steps to write rules in code editor to handle success and error events.

Open the adaptive form in authoring mode, select any form object, and tap to open the rule editor.

Select Form in the Form Objects tree and tap Create.

Select Code Editor from the mode selection drop-down.

In the code editor, tap Edit Code. Tap Edit on the confirmation dialog.

Choose Successful Submission or Error in Submission from the Event drop-down.